Engineering Guidelines
176
the 40% available bandwidth is reduced to 30% for a half duplex link, and the number of voice
channels is reduced accordingly.
The ratio from half duplex to full duplex is four (not two) because conversations need both a
talk path and a listen path. For half duplex, both paths share the same physical wire; for full
duplex, both send and receive can occur simultaneously on different wire pairs.
For half duplex, the channel availability is: 10M x 40% / (2 x 100k) = 20 channels.
Only 40% of the bandwidth is available due to collisions and collision avoidance mechanisms.
For full duplex paths, there are no collisions, so usage can double to 80%. Also there are
separate paths for send and receive data, so only half the connection bandwidth is used.
Thus, 10M x 80% / (1 x 100k) = 80 channels.
WAN bandwidth
A WAN link is generally point-to-point between routers and is always a full duplex link. The link
speed for access WAN connections is also slower, which means the number of available voice
channels is reduced. The following table shows the number of voice channels that a 1.5 Mbps
link supports.
When a WAN link is shared with other data devices there are other considerations, including
the introduction of waiting delay. The end device sees this as jitter, resulting in potential packet
loss, and the user experiences degraded voice quality.
Calculations for the number of voice channels are based purely on exclusive use of the link
bandwidth for voice. In reality, other factors similar to those of the LAN connection also come
into play. This becomes much more acute with slower WAN links.
The queuing technique and weightings to the COS or TOS value also become important. For
instance, the use of Expedite Queuing will give better advantage to voice traffic than the simple
Weighted Round Robin technique, which allows even a small percentage of lower priority traffic
under congestion.
Also, consider that if the CIR (Committed Information Rate) is based exclusively on the voice
requirements, additional data above this limit will be marked for “Eligible Discard.” This applies
to all packets, including voice traffic.
Table 50: Voice Channels Supported by a 1.5 Mbps Link
(based on a 20 ms packet rate)
CABLE CAPACITY
BANDWIDTH
%
VOICE
CHANNELS
G.711
VOICE
CHANNELS
G.729A (X 2.5)
VOICE
CHANNELS
G.722.1
1.5 Mbps without QoS mechanism
40%
6
15
9
1.5 Mbps with QoS mechanism
70%
10
26
16
Summary of Contents for MiVOICE BUSINESS
Page 1: ...Mitel MiVoice Business RELEASE 7 2 ENGINEERING GUIDELINES ...
Page 15: ...Chapter 1 ABOUT THIS DOCUMENT ...
Page 16: ......
Page 22: ...Engineering Guidelines 8 ...
Page 23: ...Chapter 2 SYSTEM OVERVIEW ...
Page 24: ......
Page 28: ...Engineering Guidelines 14 ...
Page 29: ...Chapter 3 TYPICAL CONFIGURATIONS ...
Page 30: ......
Page 73: ...Chapter 4 PHONES AND VOICE APPLICATIONS ...
Page 74: ......
Page 95: ...Phones and Voice Applications 81 Figure 9 ICP Connection Paths and Limitations ...
Page 100: ...Engineering Guidelines 86 ...
Page 101: ...Chapter 5 POWER ...
Page 102: ......
Page 128: ...Engineering Guidelines 114 ...
Page 129: ...Chapter 6 PERFORMANCE ...
Page 130: ......
Page 135: ...Chapter 7 APPLICATIONS ...
Page 136: ......
Page 142: ...Engineering Guidelines 128 ...
Page 143: ...Chapter 8 EMERGENCY SERVICES ...
Page 144: ......
Page 151: ...Chapter 9 IP NETWORKING ...
Page 152: ......
Page 167: ...Chapter 10 LICENSING ...
Page 168: ......
Page 183: ...Chapter 11 BANDWIDTH CODECS AND COMPRESSION ...
Page 184: ......
Page 209: ...Chapter 12 NETWORK CONFIGURATION CONCEPTS ...
Page 210: ......
Page 244: ...Engineering Guidelines 230 ...
Page 245: ...Chapter 13 NETWORK CONFIGURATION SPECIFICS ...
Page 246: ......
Page 309: ...Appendix A CAT 3 WIRING ...
Page 310: ......
Page 315: ...CAT 3 Wiring 301 Figure 55 CX MX MXe AX and LX Minimum Cable Standard ...
Page 316: ...Engineering Guidelines 302 ...
Page 317: ...Appendix B INSTALLATION EXAMPLES ...
Page 318: ......
Page 335: ...Appendix C LLDP AND LLDP MED CONFIGURATION EXAMPLES ...
Page 336: ......
Page 347: ...Appendix D VOIP AND VLANS ...
Page 348: ......
Page 353: ...Appendix E VOIP SECURITY ...
Page 354: ......
Page 381: ... ...